About This Item
- Full text of this item is not available.
- Abstract PDFAbstract PDF(no subscription required)
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Evaluation of Untested Stratigraphic
Traps in a Pleistocene Canyon-Fill
Complex, Offshore Louisiana
By
Eugene Island Block 390, located approximately 100 miles offshore Louisiana, was acquired by ARCO Oil and Gas Company in 1983 in order to test upper Pleistocene amplitude anomalies located on the faulted northwest flank of a diapiric salt structure. While drilling has established the presence of oil and gas in that original objective section, an attempt to delineate further reserve potential on the block was made by evaluating additional amplitude anomalies located downflank, in an adjacent syncline.
Seismic
stratigraphic
analysis
indicates that the anomalies
are located within the confines of an erosionally
incised submarine-canyon complex, approximately three
miles wide and five hundred feet deep. A number of high-amplitude
events located in the upper portion of the fill
complex are indicative of relatively coarser-grained sandstone
bodies, in contrast to the majority of the fill which is
thought to be fine-grained. In map view the high-amplitude
events are axially-elongated, dip-trending bodies that were
deposited laterally adjacent to one another.
Velocity and density data for equivalent shales, and
water, oil, and gas-bearing sands in offsetting wells were
used as input for simple two-dimensional modeling of
amplitude strength and character. The modeling suggests
that the highest amplitude events in the canyon-fill
sequence
are most similar in character to models of hydrocarbon-bearing sands, not thick water-bearing sands. Additionally,
amplitude versus offset
analysis
of the highest amplitudes is
positive for the presence of hydrocarbons.
In the deepest portions of ARCO's #1 well, stratigraphically
below their original objective, approximately fifty net
feet of oil saturated but very low permeability silt and shale
were encountered. Examination of the well location on
seismic
data indicates that the #1 well T.D.'d in the canyon
flank, updip (presently) from and laterally adjacent to the
high-amplitude events. The interpretation is that the oil
saturated section penetrated in the #1well is representative
of the seal facies, deposited along the flank of the canyon.
The integrated
analysis
outlined above suggests that
the highest amplitude events identified in the
seismic
data
are associated with hydrocarbon-bearing turbidite sands
deposited within a submarine canyon-fill
sequence
. However,
concerns about reservoir quality and heterogeneities,
as well as total reserve size of the accumulations, led ARCO
to elect to not test the turbidite sands.
End_of_Record - Last_Page 10---------------